Isaac Newton.
Sir Isaac Newton’s little reflector.
Sir Isaac Newton’s sun-dial.
Sir Isaac Newton’s telescope.
Sir Isaac Newton’s astrolabe.
Sir Isaac Newton’s sun-dial in the royal society.
Flamsteed’s house.
Flamsteed.
Halley.
Greenwich observatory in Halley’s time.
7, New king street, Bath.
From a Photograph by John Poole,
Bath.
William Herschel.
Caroline Herschel.
Street view, Herschel house, Slough.
From a Photograph by Hill & Saunders,
Eton.
Garden view, Herschel house, Slough.
From a Photograph by Hill & Saunders,
Eton.
Observatory, Herschel house, Slough.
From a Photograph by Hill & Saunders,
Eton.
The 40-foot telescope, Herschel
house, Slough.
From a Photograph by Hill & Saunders,
Eton.
Laplace.
The observatory, Dunsink.
From a Photograph by W. Lawrence,
Dublin.
ASTRONOMETER made by sir John Herschel.
Sir John Herschel.
Nebula in southern hemisphere.
The cluster in the Centaur.
Observatory at Feldhausen.
Granite column at Feldhausen.
The Earl of Rosse.
Birr castle.
From a Photograph by W. Lawrence,
Dublin.
The Mall, Parsonstown.
From a Photograph by W. Lawrence,
Dublin.
Lord Rosse’s telescope.
From a Photograph by W. Lawrence,
Dublin.
Roman Catholic church, Parsonstown.
From a Photograph by W. Lawrence,
Dublin.
Airy.
From a Photograph by E.P. Adams,
Greenwich.
Hamilton.
Adams.
The observatory, Cambridge.
INTRODUCTION.
Of all the natural sciences there is not one which offers such sublime objects to the attention of the inquirer as does the science of astronomy. From the earliest ages the study of the stars has exercised the same fascination as it possesses at the present day. Among the most primitive peoples, the movements of the sun, the moon, and the stars commanded attention from their supposed influence on human affairs.